Magnitude of trading range compared with average monthly price was 33% in Jan., highest since 2008
During the first three months of 2016, crude oil prices were relatively more volatile than in recent history, but crude oil price volatility has declined since its peak in March, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
This elevated volatility occurred when overall oil prices were low, and volatility was driven by high uncertainty related to supply, demand, and inventories.
Prices have risen as concerns about future economic growth have abated and as inventory growth has slowed since the start of the year.
The 30-day measure of oil price volatility (calculated as the standard deviation of daily percent changes in crude oil prices over the previous 30 trading days) reached a high of 45 per cent on March 4 before falling to 33 per cent on April 18.
Volatility levels in March were the highest since early 2009, when crude oil prices were falling in response to the financial crisis and to a drop in demand for petroleum products.
The recent decline in oil prices resulted in volatility levels closer to the 2015 average of 27 per cent.
Volatility often reflects market uncertainty about both the current and future value of a commodity.
Daily volatility is often driven by the release of new economic or supply information, changes in market expectations, or unanticipated events that can cause large price adjustments.
Some reasons for volatility in crude oil prices include uncertainty about:
- Future production levels in key oil-producing nations
- Global economic growth, particularly in China and other emerging market economies
- Growth in U.S. gasoline demand following higher consumption levels in 2015
- Crude oil inventories and storage capacity constraints
Volatility also increased during unexpected interruptions in oil supply, such as the disruptions that occurred during the first Gulf War in 1990, in the aftermath of hurricanes in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, and in Libya in the first half of 2011.
Monthly trading ranges, or the difference between the high and low closing oil prices in a given month, are another way of measuring volatility.
In Jan. 2016, Brent crude oil spot prices closed at a low of $26 per barrel (b) and a high of $36/b, and this $10/b trading range was higher than the range of any month in 2015.
The magnitude of the trading range compared with the average monthly price was 33 per cent in Jan., the highest since 2008.
But with the recent stabilization of oil prices, the trading range for April dropped to 13 per cent.